Hansen: Sublime parody with âLagunaticsâ
Itâs tough to explain a âLagunaticsâ show to the uninitiated. If you start with the groupâs large âcityâ logo that adorns the Forum Theater â complete with hillside fires and a huge tidal wave demolishing Laguna Beach â I doubt that will help.
The humor doesnât translate well to out-of-towners.
If you try to explain that the Latin inscription on the seal, âars gratia pecunie,â means âart for money,â that probably wonât help either.
But make no mistake, this annual musical parody, now in its 19th year, is still churning out clever skits and wicked satire in order to helps raise funds for No Square Theatre. The shows run through Oct. 30.
Writers Bree Burgess Rosen and Chris Quilter do a great job of capturing the sometimes ridiculous goings-on around Laguna.
âWhen you drive here in a car, chances are you wonât get far,â sang the barbershop quartet in an opening number.
The traffic theme features prominently throughout the show, for good reason.
Some of the funniest bits are not always spoken in the script, like in âBlack Spandex Bike Shortsâ when the infamous shorts are quickly but gleefully sniffed by a cast member.
Or when crazy Cindy greets visitors by flipping them off.
Whether itâs exploited sea lions, Mexican maids or hospital nuns, no topic is sacred. With 25 skits, thereâs a lot packed into the show.
The thing that makes this especially funny and rewarding, though, is not the great writing or musical talent or outlandish costumes; itâs the fact that we have this at all. Itâs another one of those âspecial thingsâ about Laguna.
Itâs really the people and their desire to make fun of themselves â ourselves, residents of Laguna.
Host Bill Harris had it right when he introduced one skit by saying, âLaguna Beach disagrees with just about everything.â
And itâs true. But as I looked around the audience, it struck me that generally speaking these are the readers, the political science majors, the librarians.
In high school, these were the drama kids, and they turned out cool.
They are always ahead of their time, ready with the quips and one-liners, ready with the gags that sometimes make people uncomfortable.
We need uncomfortable.
When the nuns say âoy vey,â itâs not lost.
When itâs obvious that the fastest growing business in Laguna is âSpace Available,â we nod and chuckle.
When our âeBayâ never has any trouble because itâs âunincorporated,â we shake our heads and groan.
We expect men in dresses. Men in makeup. Men as bearded nuns.
Sometimes scatological (and not appropriate for family newspapers), many of the best jokes are impossible to say out loud.
Spinning off a Charles Strouse song, a singer gave homage to the ZeroTrash Laguna group by singing, âIâll pick up anything but poo.â
You sort of had to be there.
Hereâs another one that probably wonât work out of context: Itâs a variation of the Marty Robbins song âEl Paso,â but this one is âLaguna.â
âOut in this O.C. town called Laguna, I fell in love with my Mexican maidâŚâ
Yes, you had to be there.
Thereâs still time. Thereâs always time to make fun of ourselves and keep us honest.
DAVID HANSEN is a writer and Laguna Beach resident. He can be reached at [email protected].
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